Voltaire
| "I
may disagree with what you say, but I will defend to the death
your right to say it" - Voltaire |
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Francois
Marie Arouet (pen name Voltaire) was born on November 21,
1694 in Paris. Voltaires intelligence, wit and style
made him one of Frances greatest writers and philosophers.
Young
Francois Marie received his education at Louis-le-Grand,
a Jesuit college in Paris where he said he learned nothing
but Latin and the Stupidities. He left school
at 17 and soon made friends among the Parisian aristocrats.
His humorous verses made him a favorite in society circles.
In 1717, his sharp wit got him into trouble with the authorities.
He was imprisoned in the Bastille for eleven months for
writing a scathing satire of the French government. During
his time in prison Francois Marie wrote Oedipe
which was to become his first theatrical success, and also
adopted his pen name Voltaire.
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| Those who can make you believe absurdities can make
you commit atrocities. - Voltaire |
In
1726, Voltaire insulted the powerful young nobleman, Chevalier
De Rohan, and was given two options: imprisonment or exile.
He chose exile and from 1726 to 1729 lived in England. While in
England Voltaire was attracted to the philosophy of John Locke
and ideas of mathematician and scientist, Sir Isaac Newton. He
studied England's Constitutional Monarchy and its religious tolerance.
Voltaire was particularly interested in the philosophical rationalism
of the time, and in the study of the natural sciences. After returning
to Paris he wrote a book praising English customs and institutions.
It was interpreted as criticism of the French government, and
in 1734 Voltaire was forced to leave Paris again.
At
the invitation of a highly-intelligent woman friend, Marquise
du Chatelet, Voltaire moved into her Chateau de Cirey
near Luneville in eastern France. They studied the natural sciences
together for several years. In 1746, Voltaire was voted into the
Academie Francaise. In 1749, after the death of Marquise
du Chatelet and at the invitation
of the King of Prussia, Frederick the Great, he moved
to Potsdam (near Berlin in Germany). In 1753, Voltaire left Potsdam
to return to France.
In
1759, Voltaire purchased an estate called Ferney near
the French-Swiss border where he lived until just before of his
death. Ferney soon became the intellectual capital of Europe.
Voltaire worked continuously throughout the years, producing a
constant flow of books, plays and other publications. He wrote
hundreds of letters to his circle of friends. He was always a
voice of reason. Voltaire was often an outspoken critic of religious
intolerance and persecution.
Voltaire
returned to a heros welcome in Paris at age 83. The excitement
of the trip was too much for him and he died in Paris. Because
of his criticism of the church Voltaire was denied burial in church
ground. He was finally buried at an abbey in Champagne. In 1791,
his remains were moved to a resting place at the Pantheon in Paris.
In
1814, a group of ultras (a right-wing religious group)
stole Voltaires remains and dumped them in a garbage heap.
No one was the wiser for some 50 years. His enormous sarcophagus
(opposite Rousseaus) was checked and the remains were gone.
(see Orieux, Voltaire, vol. 2 pp. 382-4.) His heart, however,
had been removed from his body, and now lies in the Bibliotheque
Nationale in Paris. His brain was also removed, but after a series
of passings-on over 100 years, disappeared after an auction.
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Learn!
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"Voltaire's
Philosophical Dictionary", first published in 1764,
is a series of short, radical essays - alphabetically arranged
- that form a brilliant and bitter analysis of the social
and religious conventions that then dominated eighteenth-century
French thought. One of the masterpieces of the Enlightenment,
this enormously influential work of sardonic wit - more
a collection of essays arranged alphabetically, than a conventional
dictionary - considers such diverse subjects as Abraham
and Atheism, Faith and Freedom of Thought, Miracles and
Moses.
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more
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